How Wolves Are Driving Down Mountain Lion Populations
A recent study from Wyoming shows that when the two predators overlap, wolves kill kittens in high numbers and push adults to starvation
What Scientists Are Learning About Covid-19 Using the Nation’s Blood Supply
Labs and blood banks collect millions of blood samples each month, offering a distinctive source of data on the disease
How 19th-Century Activists Ditched Corsets for One-Piece Long Underwear
Before it was embraced by men, the union suit, or ‘emancipation suit,’ was worn by women pushing for dress reform
Proactive Tips for Speaking With Children About Violence, Racism and Tragic Events
What do we tell children now? It’s time to ask ourselves what we are going to say and do before the next time this happens
When Radio Stations Stopped a Public Figure From Spreading Dangerous Lies
When radio was king, many outlets chose to cease broadcasting Father Charles Coughlin’s anti-Semitic sermons
Smithsonian Educators Offer Tips for Talking to Children After a Traumatic Event
As details about traumatic events unfold in the news, it is important for families to navigate these conversations with young children with care.
How ‘Wonder Woman 1984’ Was Filmed at the Smithsonian
The blockbuster saw the superhero working as a museum anthropologist. But how accurate was its depiction of the Institution at the time?
Ancient Insect Genitals Found in 50-Million-Year-Old Fossil
A newly discovered assassin bug features a well-preserved phallus the size of a grain of rice
A New Film Details the FBI’s Relentless Pursuit of Martin Luther King Jr.
Smithsonian scholar says the time is ripe to examine the man’s complexities for a more accurate and more inspirational history
The True History Behind ‘One Night in Miami’
Regina King’s directorial debut dramatizes a 1964 meeting between Cassius Clay, Malcolm X, Sam Cooke and Jim Brown
From a Small, Rural Schoolhouse, One Teacher Challenged Nativist Attacks Against Immigration
In the wake of World War I, rabid anti-German sentiment led to the arrest, later deemed unjust by the U.S. Supreme Court, of Robert Meyer
Shocking Study Finds Electric Eels Hunt Together
The study challenges what researchers know about eels’ supposed loner behavior
Nine Attention-Grabbing Inventions Unveiled at This Year’s CES
Held virtually, the Consumer Electronics Show still debuted plenty of new gadgets, from an easy-to-use beehive to a Bluetooth mask
The Life and Death of a Yiddish Puppet Theater
Puppets weren’t a common form of entertainment in Jewish culture
Why Are Lightning ‘Superbolts’ More Common Over the Ocean?
Salt seems to be the reason why bolts are brighter over seas than over land
45,000-Year-Old Pig Painting in Indonesia May Be Oldest Known Animal Art
Ice Age cave painters flourished in Southeast Asia, where their work adorned rock walls
Who Was Charles Curtis, the First Vice President of Color?
A member of the Kaw Nation, Curtis served under Herbert Hoover, but he left a troubling legacy on Native American issues
What Antarctic Meteorites Tell Us About Earth’s Origins
Each year, Smithsonian scientists collect hundreds of meteorites from Antarctica that reveal details about the origins of Earth and our solar system
Why PTSD May Plague Many Hospitalized Covid-19 Survivors
Scientists warn about the likelihood of post-traumatic stress disorder for patients discharged from the intensive care unit
From His Tattered Chair, TV’s Archie Bunker Caricatured America’s Divides
The 1971 show aired the fraught political differences that were “All in the Family”
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